AI Article Synopsis

  • Diuretics might help reduce fluid overload in patients before starting dialysis, and this study explored their impact on delaying dialysis necessity, conditions at the start of dialysis, and early mortality.
  • Researchers analyzed data from over 59,000 patients who started dialysis between 2009 and 2015, categorizing them based on their exposure to diuretics over the previous year.
  • Results showed that those continuously using diuretics had fewer emergency dialysis starts, required fewer central venous catheters, experienced lower hospitalization rates, and potentially had lower mortality in the first three months after starting dialysis compared to those who stopped or never used diuretics.

Article Abstract

Background: Diuretics can reduce fluid overload but their effects on conditions of dialysis start remain elusive. We aimed to determine whether loop diuretics exposure in the year before inception can delay the need for dialysis, affect the conditions of dialysis start, and cause early mortality three months after initiation in pre-dialysis patients.

Methods: All adult patients starting dialysis from 2009 to 2015 in the REIN registry were included. Three subgroups were defined according to diuretics exposure: "continuous", "stopped", or "no diuretics" over the year before inception and compared for pre-dialysis hospitalization rates, and 3-month mortality after dialysis.

Results: Among 59,302 patients, we found fewer emergency initiations of dialysis in the continuous diuretics group than in the stopped diuretics and no diuretics groups: 9492 (27.5%) vs 1905 (32.3%) and 5226 (35.0%), respectively; p < 0.0001. In the continuous diuretics group, there were fewer starts on central venous catheters than in the stopped diuretics and no diuretics groups: 16,677 (49.4%) vs. 3246 (56.0%) vs. 8,639 (58.4%); p < 0.0001. Patients with continuous diuretic exposure had a lower hospitalization rate than the stopped diuretics group in the year prior to dialysis, except for heart failure. The unadjusted 3-month hazard ratio of mortality after dialysis inception was significantly higher in the "no diuretics" or "stopped diuretics" groups compared with "continuous diuretics", but the excess of risk was blunted after adjustment for emergency start and pre-dialysis visits to a nephrologist.

Conclusion: Continuous loop diuretics exposure in the year before dialysis was associated with better conditions of dialysis inception, and possibly lower mortality rates in the three months after inception.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40620-023-01752-3DOI Listing

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